Shogun (novel)
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- This page is about the James Clavell novel. For other meanings of Shogun, see Shogun (disambiguation).
Shōgun is the first novel in James Clavell's Asian Saga. It is set in feudal Japan somewhere around the year 1600 and gives a highly fictionalized account of the rise of Tokugawa Ieyasu to the Shogunate, seen through the eyes of an English sailor whose fictional heroics are loosely based on William Adams' exploits.
John Blackthorne (given the nickname Anjin, meaning pilot, by the Japanese since they couldn't pronounce his name), pilot and acting captain of the Dutch trading ship Erasmus, is shipwrecked on the coast of Japan. He enters the service of Toranaga, a powerful feudal warlord who rules over the Kanto plain, the site of modern-day Tokyo, and falls in love with Mariko, a convert to Christianity who's torn between her new religion and her native culture, which rejects Christianity.
Despite an inhospitable welcome, Blackthorne slowly gains an understanding of the Japanese people and their culture, and eventually learns to deeply respect it. The Japanese also grow to respect the 'barbarian' and he is eventually granted the status of samurai.
The novel has been adapted as a television miniseries, a Broadway musical, and several computer games, including an Infocom text adventure.
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Key to characters
These characters in Shogun are based on historical figures:
- Goroda: Oda Nobunaga
- Nakamura: Toyotomi Hideyoshi
- Toranaga: Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Blackthorne: William Adams
- Yaemon: Toyotomi Hideyori
- Sudara: Tokugawa Hidetada
- Ishido: Ishida Mitsunari
- Mariko: Hosokawa Gracia
- Martin Alvito: Joćo Rodrigues
The ship's name of Erasmus is most likely taken from the original name of the ship De Liefde, the Dutch ship piloted by William Adams which made landfall on the coast of Japan in 1600. The real Erasmus was renamed to fit in with the names of the other four ships of the expedition leaving Holland in 1598.
Television
A television miniseries was produced in 1980. It's nine hours (twelve with commercials) aired over five nights. It starred Richard Chamberlain, Toshiro Mifune and John Rhys-Davies. It was edited into a two hour version for theatrical release.
Computer games
There have been four games released by the name of Shogun. Two text-based adventure games (with sparse graphics) for the Amiga and PC, a unique graphical Virgin Entertainment adventure game for the Commodore 64, and a 3D war strategy game (titled Shogun: Total War) released around 2002. While the first games are true to the story, the last is an unrelated real time strategy war game where troops are archers, horsemen, etc.
"James Clavell's Shogun" and "Shogun (Mastertronic)" are abandonware, and are no longer available for purchase. However, abandonware sites such as Home of the Underdogs may have them available. Keep in mind any such downloads are illegal, and that you would do so at your own risk.
"Shōgun" for the Commodore 64, produced in 1986 by "Lee & Mathias" is available only via emulation. Emulation can also be of questionable legality, the above warning applies as well.